Chapter 7: Relational Database Design
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Transcript Chapter 7: Relational Database Design
Chapter 9: Object-Relational Databases
Nested Relations
Complex Types and Object Orientation
Querying with Complex Types
Creation of Complex Values and Objects
Comparison of Object-Oriented and Object-Relational Databases
Database System Concepts
9.1
©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Object-Relational Data Models
Extend the relational data model by including object orientation
and constructs to deal with added data types.
Allow attributes of tuples to have complex types, including non-
atomic values such as nested relations.
Preserve relational foundations, in particular the declarative
access to data, while extending modeling power.
Upward compatibility with existing relational languages.
Database System Concepts
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Nested Relations
Motivation:
Permit non-atomic domains (atomic indivisible)
Example of non-atomic domain: set of integers,or set of
tuples
Allows more intuitive modeling for applications with
complex data
Intuitive definition:
allow relations whenever we allow atomic (scalar) values
— relations within relations
Retains mathematical foundation of relational model
Violates first normal form.
Database System Concepts
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Example of a Nested Relation
Example: library information system
Each book has
title,
a set of authors,
Publisher, and
a set of keywords
Non-1NF relation books
Database System Concepts
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1NF Version of Nested Relation
1NF version of books
flat-books
Database System Concepts
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4NF Decomposition of Nested Relation
Remove awkwardness of flat-books by assuming that the
following multivalued dependencies hold:
title
author
title
keyword
title
pub-name, pub-branch
Decompose flat-doc into 4NF using the schemas:
(title, author)
(title, keyword)
(title, pub-name, pub-branch)
Database System Concepts
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4NF Decomposition of flat–books
Database System Concepts
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Problems with 4NF Schema
4NF design requires users to include joins in their queries.
1NF relational view flat-books defined by join of 4NF relations:
eliminates the need for users to perform joins,
but loses the one-to-one correspondence between tuples and
documents.
And has a large amount of redundancy
Nested relations representation is much more natural here.
Database System Concepts
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Complex Types and SQL:1999
Extensions to SQL to support complex types include:
Collection and large object types
Nested relations are an example of collection types
Structured types
Nested record structures like composite attributes
Inheritance
Object orientation
Including object identifiers and references
Our description is mainly based on the SQL:1999 standard
Not fully implemented in any database system currently
But some features are present in each of the major commercial
database systems
Read the manual of your database system to see what it
supports
We present some features that are not in SQL:1999
These are noted explicitly
Database System Concepts
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Collection Types
Set type (not in SQL:1999)
create table books (
…..
keyword-set setof(varchar(20))
……
)
Sets are an instance of collection types. Other instances include
Arrays (are supported in SQL:1999)
E.g. author-array varchar(20) array[10]
Can access elements of array in usual fashion:
– E.g. author-array[1]
Multisets (not supported in SQL:1999)
I.e., unordered collections, where an element may occur multiple
times
Nested relations are sets of tuples
SQL:1999 supports arrays of tuples
Database System Concepts
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Large Object Types
Large object types
clob: Character large objects
book-review clob(10KB)
blob: binary large objects
image
blob(10MB)
movie
blob (2GB)
JDBC/ODBC provide special methods to access large objects in
small pieces
Similar to accessing operating system files
Application retrieves a locator for the large object and then
manipulates the large object from the host language
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Structured and Collection Types
Structured types can be declared and used in SQL
create type Publisher as
(name
varchar(20),
branch
varchar(20))
create type Book as
(title
varchar(20),
author-array varchar(20) array [10],
pub-date
date,
publisher
Publisher,
keyword-set setof(varchar(20)))
Note: setof declaration of keyword-set is not supported by SQL:1999
Using an array to store authors lets us record the order of the authors
Structured types can be used to create tables
create table books of Book
Similar to the nested relation books, but with array of authors
instead of set
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Structured and Collection Types (Cont.)
Structured types allow composite attributes of E-R diagrams
to be represented directly.
Unnamed row types can also be used in SQL:1999 to define
composite attributes
E.g. we can omit the declaration of type Publisher and instead
use the following in declaring the type Book
publisher row (name varchar(20),
branch varchar(20))
Similarly, collection types allow multivalued attributes of E-R
diagrams to be represented directly.
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Structured Types (Cont.)
We can create tables without creating an intermediate type
For example, the table books could also be defined as follows:
create table books
(title varchar(20),
author-array varchar(20) array[10],
pub-date date,
publisher Publisher
keyword-list setof(varchar(20)))
Methods can be part of the type definition of a structured type:
create type Employee as (
name varchar(20),
salary integer)
method giveraise (percent integer)
We create the method body separately
create method giveraise (percent integer) for Employee
begin
set self.salary = self.salary + (self.salary * percent) / 100;
end
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Creation of Values of Complex Types
Values of structured types are created using constructor functions
E.g. Publisher(‘McGraw-Hill’, ‘New York’)
Note: a value is not an object
SQL:1999 constructor functions
E.g.
create function Publisher (n varchar(20), b varchar(20))
returns Publisher
begin
set name=n;
set branch=b;
end
Every structured type has a default constructor with no arguments,
others can be defined as required
Values of row type can be constructed by listing values in parantheses
E.g. given row type row (name varchar(20),
branch varchar(20))
We can assign (`McGraw-Hill’,`New York’) as a value of above type
Database System Concepts
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Creation of Values of Complex Types
Array construction
array [‘Silberschatz’,`Korth’,`Sudarshan’]
Set value attributes (not supported in SQL:1999)
set( v1, v2, …, vn)
To create a tuple of the books relation
(‘Compilers’, array[`Smith’,`Jones’],
Publisher(`McGraw-Hill’,`New York’),
set(`parsing’,`analysis’))
To insert the preceding tuple into the relation books
insert into books
values
(`Compilers’, array[`Smith’,`Jones’],
Publisher(‘McGraw Hill’,`New York’ ),
set(`parsing’,`analysis’))
Database System Concepts
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Inheritance
Suppose that we have the following type definition for people:
create type Person
(name varchar(20),
address varchar(20))
Using inheritance to define the student and teacher types
create type Student
under Person
(degree
varchar(20),
department varchar(20))
create type Teacher
under Person
(salary
integer,
department varchar(20))
Subtypes can redefine methods by using overriding method in place
of method in the method declaration
Database System Concepts
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Multiple Inheritance
SQL:1999 does not support multiple inheritance
If our type system supports multiple inheritance, we can define a
type for teaching assistant as follows:
create type Teaching Assistant
under Student, Teacher
To avoid a conflict between the two occurrences of department we
can rename them
create type Teaching Assistant
under
Student with (department as student-dept),
Teacher with (department as teacher-dept)
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Table Inheritance
Table inheritance allows an object to have multiple types by
allowing an entity to exist in more than one table at once.
E.g. people table:
create table people of Person
We can then define the students and teachers tables as
subtables of people
create table students of Student
under people
create table teachers of Teacher
under people
Each tuple in a subtable (e.g. students and teachers) is implicitly
present in its supertables (e.g. people)
Multiple inheritance is possible with tables, just as it is possible with
types.
create table teaching-assistants of Teaching Assistant
under students, teachers
Multiple inheritance not supported in SQL:1999
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Table Inheritance: Roles
Table inheritance is useful for modeling roles
permits a value to have multiple types, without having a
most-specific type (unlike type inheritance).
e.g., an object can be in the students and teachers subtables
simultaneously, without having to be in a subtable student-teachers
that is under both students and teachers
object can gain/lose roles: corresponds to inserting/deleting object
from a subtable
NOTE: SQL:1999 requires values to have a most specific type
so above discussion is not applicable to SQL:1999
Database System Concepts
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Table Inheritance: Consistency Requirements
Consistency requirements on subtables and supertables.
Each tuple of the supertable (e.g. people) can correspond to at
most one tuple in each of the subtables (e.g. students and teachers)
Additional constraint in SQL:1999:
All tuples corresponding to each other (that is, with the same values
for inherited attributes) must be derived from one tuple (inserted into
one table).
That is, each entity must have a most specific type
We cannot have a tuple in people corresponding to a tuple each
in students and teachers
Database System Concepts
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Table Inheritance: Storage Alternatives
Storage alternatives
1. Store only local attributes and the primary key of the supertable in
subtable
Inherited attributes derived by means of a join with the
supertable
2. Each table stores all inherited and locally defined attributes
Supertables implicitly contain (inherited attributes of) all tuples in
their subtables
Access to all attributes of a tuple is faster: no join required
If entities must have most specific type, tuple is stored only in
one table, where it was created
Otherwise, there could be redundancy
Database System Concepts
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Reference Types
Object-oriented languages provide the ability to create and refer to
objects.
In SQL:1999
References are to tuples, and
References must be scoped,
I.e., can only point to tuples in one specified table
We will study how to define references first, and later see how to use
references
Database System Concepts
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Reference Declaration in SQL:1999
E.g. define a type Department with a field name and a field head
which is a reference to the type Person, with table people as
scope
create type Department(
name varchar(20),
head ref(Person) scope people)
We can then create a table departments as follows
create table departments of Department
We can omit the declaration scope people from the type
declaration and instead make an addition to the create table
statement:
create table departments of Department
(head with options scope people)
Database System Concepts
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Initializing Reference Typed Values
In Oracle, to create a tuple with a reference value, we can first
create the tuple with a null reference and then set the reference
separately by using the function ref(p) applied to a tuple variable
E.g. to create a department with name CS and head being the
person named John, we use
insert into departments
values (`CS’, null)
update departments
set head = (select ref(p)
from people as p
where name=`John’)
where name = `CS’
Database System Concepts
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Initializing Reference Typed Values (Cont.)
SQL:1999 does not support the ref() function, and instead
requires a special attribute to be declared to store the object
identifier
The self-referential attribute is declared by adding a ref is clause
to the create table statement:
create table people of Person
ref is oid system generated
Here, oid is an attribute name, not a keyword.
To get the reference to a tuple, the subquery shown earlier would
use
instead of
Database System Concepts
select p.oid
select ref(p)
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User Generated Identifiers
SQL:1999 allows object identifiers to be user-generated
The type of the object-identifier must be specified as part of the type
definition of the referenced table, and
The table definition must specify that the reference is user generated
E.g.
create type Person
(name varchar(20)
address varchar(20))
ref using varchar(20)
create table people of Person
ref is oid user generated
When creating a tuple, we must provide a unique value for the
identifier (assumed to be the first attribute):
insert into people values
(‘01284567’, ‘John’, `23 Coyote Run’)
Database System Concepts
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User Generated Identifiers (Cont.)
We can then use the identifier value when inserting a tuple into
departments
Avoids need for a separate query to retrieve the identifier:
E.g. insert into departments
values(`CS’, `02184567’)
It is even possible to use an existing primary key value as the
identifier, by including the ref from clause, and declaring the
reference to be derived
create type Person
(name varchar(20) primary key,
address varchar(20))
ref from(name)
create table people of Person
ref is oid derived
When inserting a tuple for departments, we can then use
insert into departments
values(`CS’,`John’)
Database System Concepts
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Path Expressions
Find the names and addresses of the heads of all departments:
select head –>name, head –>address
from departments
An expression such as “head–>name” is called a path
expression
Path expressions help avoid explicit joins
If department head were not a reference, a join of departments with
people would be required to get at the address
Makes expressing the query much easier for the user
Database System Concepts
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Querying with Structured Types
Find the title and the name of the publisher of each book.
select title, publisher.name
from books
Note the use of the dot notation to access fields of the composite
attribute (structured type) publisher
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Collection-Value Attributes
Collection-valued attributes can be treated much like relations, using
the keyword unnest
The books relation has array-valued attribute author-array and setvalued attribute keyword-set
To find all books that have the word “database” as one of their
keywords,
select title
from books
where ‘database’ in (unnest(keyword-set))
Note: Above syntax is valid in SQL:1999, but the only collection type
supported by SQL:1999 is the array type
To get a relation containing pairs of the form “title, author-name” for
each book and each author of the book
select B.title, A
from books as B, unnest (B.author-array) as A
Database System Concepts
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Collection Valued Attributes (Cont.)
We can access individual elements of an array by using indices
E.g. If we know that a particular book has three authors, we could
write:
select author-array[1], author-array[2], author-array[3]
from books
where title = `Database System Concepts’
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Unnesting
The transformation of a nested relation into a form with fewer (or no)
relation-valued attributes us called unnesting.
E.g.
select title, A as author, publisher.name as pub_name,
publisher.branch as pub_branch, K as keyword
from books as B, unnest(B.author-array) as A, unnest (B.keywordlist) as K
Database System Concepts
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Nesting
Nesting is the opposite of unnesting, creating a collection-valued attribute
NOTE: SQL:1999 does not support nesting
Nesting can be done in a manner similar to aggregation, but using the
function set() in place of an aggregation operation, to create a set
To nest the flat-books relation on the attribute keyword:
select title, author, Publisher(pub_name, pub_branch) as publisher,
set(keyword) as keyword-list
from flat-books
groupby title, author, publisher
To nest on both authors and keywords:
select title, set(author) as author-list,
Publisher(pub_name, pub_branch) as publisher,
set(keyword) as keyword-list
from flat-books
groupby title, publisher
Database System Concepts
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Nesting (Cont.)
Another approach to creating nested relations is to use
subqueries in the select clause.
select title,
( select author
from flat-books as M
where M.title=O.title) as author-set,
Publisher(pub-name, pub-branch) as publisher,
(select keyword
from flat-books as N
where N.title = O.title) as keyword-set
from flat-books as O
Can use orderby clause in nested query to get an ordered
collection
Can thus create arrays, unlike earlier approach
Database System Concepts
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Functions and Procedures
SQL:1999 supports functions and procedures
Functions/procedures can be written in SQL itself, or in an external
programming language
Functions are particularly useful with specialized data types such as
images and geometric objects
E.g. functions to check if polygons overlap, or to compare
images for similarity
Some databases support table-valued functions, which can return
a relation as a result
SQL:1999 also supports a rich set of imperative constructs,
including
Loops, if-then-else, assignment
Many databases have proprietary procedural extensions to SQL
that differ from SQL:1999
Database System Concepts
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SQL Functions
Define a function that, given a book title, returns the count of the
number of authors (on the 4NF schema with relations books4
and authors).
create function author-count(name varchar(20))
returns integer
begin
declare a-count integer;
select count(author) into a-count
from authors
where authors.title=name
return a=count;
end
Find the titles of all books that have more than one author.
select name
from books4
where author-count(title)> 1
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SQL Methods
Methods can be viewed as functions associated with structured
types
They have an implicit first parameter called self which is set to the
structured-type value on which the method is invoked
The method code can refer to attributes of the structured-type value
using the self variable
E.g.
Database System Concepts
self.a
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SQL Functions and Procedures (cont.)
The author-count function could instead be written as procedure:
create procedure author-count-proc (in title varchar(20),
out a-count integer)
begin
select count(author) into a-count
from authors
where authors.title = title
end
Procedures can be invoked either from an SQL procedure or from
embedded SQL, using the call statement.
E.g. from an SQL procedure
declare a-count integer;
call author-count-proc(`Database systems Concepts’, a-count);
SQL:1999 allows more than one function/procedure of the same name
(called name overloading), as long as the number of
arguments differ, or at least the types of the arguments differ
Database System Concepts
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External Language Functions/Procedures
SQL:1999 permits the use of functions and procedures
written in other languages such as C or C++
Declaring external language procedures and functions
create procedure author-count-proc(in title varchar(20),
out count integer)
language C
external name’ /usr/avi/bin/author-count-proc’
create function author-count(title varchar(20))
returns integer
language C
external name ‘/usr/avi/bin/author-count’
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External Language Routines (Cont.)
Benefits of external language functions/procedures:
more efficient for many operations, and more expressive
power
Drawbacks
Code to implement function may need to be loaded into
database system and executed in the database system’s
address space
risk of accidental corruption of database structures
security risk, allowing users access to unauthorized data
There are alternatives, which give good security at the cost of
potentially worse performance
Direct execution in the database system’s space is used when
efficiency is more important than security
Database System Concepts
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Security with External Language Routines
To deal with security problems
Use sandbox techniques
that is use a safe language like Java, which cannot be
used to access/damage other parts of the database code
Or, run external language functions/procedures in a separate
process, with no access to the database process’ memory
Parameters and results communicated via inter-process
communication
Both have performance overheads
Many database systems support both above
approaches as well as direct executing in database
system address space
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Procedural Constructs
SQL:1999 supports a rich variety of procedural constructs
Compound statement
is of the form begin … end,
may contain multiple SQL statements between begin and end.
Local variables can be declared within a compound statements
While and repeat statements
declare n integer default 0;
while n < 10 do
set n = n+1
end while
repeat
set n = n – 1
until n = 0
end repeat
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Procedural Constructs (Cont.)
For loop
Permits iteration over all results of a query
E.g. find total of all balances at the Perryridge branch
declare n integer default 0;
for r as
select balance from account
where branch-name = ‘Perryridge’
do
set n = n + r.balance
end for
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Procedural Constructs (cont.)
Conditional statements (if-then-else)
E.g. To find sum of balances for each of three categories of accounts
(with balance <1000, >=1000 and <5000, >= 5000)
if r.balance < 1000
then set l = l + r.balance
elseif r.balance < 5000
then set m = m + r.balance
else set h = h + r.balance
end if
SQL:1999 also supports a case statement similar to C case statement
Signaling of exception conditions, and declaring handlers for exceptions
declare out_of_stock condition
declare exit handler for out_of_stock
begin
…
.. signal out-of-stock
end
The handler here is exit -- causes enclosing begin..end to be exited
Other actions possible on exception
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Comparison of O-O and O-R Databases
Summary of strengths of various database systems:
Relational systems
simple data types, powerful query languages, high protection.
Persistent-programming-language-based OODBs
complex data types, integration with programming language, high
performance.
Object-relational systems
complex data types, powerful query languages, high protection.
Note: Many real systems blur these boundaries
E.g. persistent programming language built as a wrapper on a
relational database offers first two benefits, but may have poor
performance.
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Finding all employees of a manager
Procedure to find all employees who work directly or indirectly for mgr
Relation manager(empname, mgrname)specifies who directly works for whom
Result is stored in empl(name)
create procedure findEmp(in mgr char(10))
begin
create temporary table newemp(name char(10));
create temporary table temp(name char(10));
insert into newemp -- store all direct employees of mgr in newemp
select empname
from manager
where mgrname = mgr
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Finding all employees of a manager(cont.)
repeat
insert into empl
select name
from newemp;
-- add all new employees found to empl
insert into temp
-- find all employees of people already found
(select manager.empname
from newemp, manager
where newemp.empname = manager.mgrname;
)
except (
-- but remove those who were found earlier
select empname
from empl
);
delete from newemp; -- replace contents of newemp by contents of temp
insert into newemp
select *
from temp;
delete from temp;
until not exists(select* from newemp) -- stop when no new employees are found
end repeat;
end
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End of Chapter
A Partially Nested Version of the flat-books Relation
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